The punishment ,however, is to the advantage of the lucky  Ecuadorians.
Cristobal  Senior
 
 
Ecuador oil move prompts US ire. BBC
The US says it is cancelling  free-trade negotiations with Ecuador, after the 
South American country seized  the assets of a US oil company. Ecuadorean oil 
officials cancelled Occidental  Petroleum's operating contract after a 
long-running dispute. 

The US  administration said it was "disappointed" with the decision. 

Bolivia  recently declared it was nationalising foreign energy companies, but 
Ecuador  says other foreign energy companies have nothing to fear. 

It insists the  dispute is specific to Occidental, which it says violated the 
terms of its  operating contract by selling part of an Ecuadorean field to 
Canada's EnCana in  2000 without Ecuador's approval. 

On Monday, the Quito government  cancelled Occidental's contract, and the 
following day officials from Ecuador's  state-owned oil company Petroecuador 
began to take over offices and  installations run by the company. 

Ecuadorean President Alfredo Palacio  has sent troops to guard oil facilities 
seized from Occidental as they are  transferred to state control, news agency 
AP quoted officials as saying.  

Officials say they are considering teaming up with another South  American 
state-owned company to operate the fields formerly run by Occidental,  which 
produce a fifth of Ecuador's oil output. 

Freeze on talks  

"We are very disappointed at the decision of Ecuador, which appears to  
constitute a seizure of assets of a US company," said Neena Moorjani, a  
spokeswoman for the US Trade Representative's office, in a statement.  

"At this time no further [free-trade agreement] discussions are  scheduled." 




She said countries must "obey the rule of law  with respect to foreign 
investors" if they hoped to be a free-trade partner of  the US, adding she 
expected 
Ecuador to pay Occidental compensation. 

In  response, Ecuador's government spokesman Enrique Proano, said his country 
 "laments the declaration by the United States", and questioned the fact that 
"a  sovereign decision by Ecuador" should affect trade negotiations. 

Before  the US announcement, Ecuador's interior minister said any US move to 
suspend the  trade talks would amount to "blackmail". 

Occidental had been pumping  100,000 barrels a day from wells in the Amazon 
jungle, which it said represented  7% of the company's worldwide production. 

In a statement the company  said it was "evaluating its legal options to 
defend its interests", but  expressed hope that an "amicable settlement" could 
be 
reached. 

It had  previously offered the Ecuador government up to $1bn (£569m) in 
disputed taxes,  investments and extra revenues to end the dispute, while 
denying 
wrongdoing.  

Indigenous opposition 

The takeover of Occidental was welcomed by  indigenous groups in Ecuador, who 
had campaigned for the company to be expelled.  

They were also at the heart of protests in March against free-trade  
negotiations with the US, which saw a state of emergency declared in five  
provinces. 

The US has already reached such bilateral agreements with  Peru and Colombia, 
but some Latin American campaigners say they do not benefit  ordinary 
workers. 

Separately, both Bolivia and Venezuela have this month  announced measures to 
increase revenue from foreign energy companies operating  within their 
borders. 
 

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